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YORK IT’S IN THE EVENING WORLD” NEW YORK, FRIDAY, Ju N E 30, <a 1922 J Circulation Books Open to All.” ~ a o- Entered as Second-Clans Matter Post Office, New Work, N. Y¥. PRICE THREE CENTS Fi DVER ANO PARTNER INDICTED WITH TWO MANAGERS: FOUR ORDERED ARRESTED AT ONCE 3 OFFICE; CALLS IT THANKLESS J0B ‘Others Allege “Bucketing.” Claims He Cleaned Up Town and Reward Was Demand ~ for Removal. Banton Directs Head of Firm, Lawrence, Shrimpton and Recklein to Appear This Af- ternoon for a Hearing. Sixteen indictments charging grand larceny and the “bucketing” @f stock orders were found to-day against Elmore D. Dier and Harry J. Lawrence, members of the defunct brokerage firm of E. D. Dier Co. Nine indictments charging “bucketing” were also found against Benjamin F. Shrimpton and Adam Recklein, managers of tae concern. Beneh warrants for their arrest “were immediately issued by Supreme ‘ourt Justice Geigerich and District Attorney Banton ordered their coun- a to produce them in court this afternoon. ‘Thé District Attorney said these in- @ictments were only the forerunner of many others, as the Grand Jury had inspected the firm's books for merely the last three months. The July Grand Jury, he added, would devote most of its time to the Dier books for eariler periods in its financial history. ‘ Inhanding up the indictments to u Giegerich Foreman George Biagdch made a brief address, in which he complimented Assistant Dis- trict Attdrneys Schreiber, O'Neill, Geraty and McKenna for the manner it. which they had presented evidence against the Dier concern. The jury founf seven indictments each “against Dier und Lawrence, them with grand larceny In the first and second degrees. These two were also indicted with Shrimp- ton and Recklein on nine charges of “bucketing” orders for stockse It was on sworn complaints of An- drew M. Hamill of No. 617 West 129th Street, and others, that the seven bills for grand larceny were found. Hamill charges Dier and ‘Lawrence stole from him $1,060 which was given to the firm for the pur- ghase of a $1,000 bond of the North- ‘western Bell Telephone Company. ‘Ths other complainants were George Heckeroth of No. 82 Wert YOUNGSTOWN, 0., June 30.— George L. Oles, elected Mayor of Youngstown on an. independent ticket, after “a Sensational ci. apatgn, today resigned from office, after six stormy months of Administration. A statement given out >y Oles said t' it “my head is full of public trou-. bles and of praise, enough to Jast me the rest of my life," and asserted that no matter what I do, I make ene- mies."” He attacked business men who signed petitions to retain “at war time wages" twenty-five policemen whom he discharged. “Talk about a tfankless job," the statement continhed. “If there ever was one on earth there is none com- pared to this. I have given away $2,600 of the hardest earned money I have ever earned or will earn, and I receive five thank-yous. Wonderful Oles was referring to his giving his salary to charity. “I cut the city budget for next year to $800,000," he added, ‘and only one taxpayer wrote to thank me. : I cleaned off your old diamond (Pub- lic Square) and made it green. , . . I have practically cleaned the town of liquor. Many a notorious building is standing empty. “I have put Youngstown on the map, not only in this country, but throughout the world,’ said the state- ment, listing a dozen countries in which stories about Oles's eccentric methods have been published. A petition asking for Oles's removal as Mayor was filed with Gov. Davis a few days ago. The Mayor was charged with incompetency and ac- cepting grgtt. given by him as margin for the ples A Direct Insult to Ball Players President of Washingtons Defends Teams as 98 Per Cent. Gentlemen and Will Not Mrs. Mallary Also Wins Her Match Against Miss Hollick Tolerate Such Talk to His Club. WASHINGTON, June 30.—Clark Griffith, President, of the Washington in To-Day’s Play. GREAT CROWD ON HAND American League club, in a statement to-day took exception to the repurted lecture recently given by, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Beseball Commis- sioner, to members of the New York and Boston American League ciubs, declaring he considered Judge Landis’s remarks “that the ball players must not gamble, bootleg or cazanse around at night a direct insult to 98 per cent. of the ball players of the country.” Noting that Judge Landis's talk to the Yankees and Red Sox had been announced as the first of @ series of similar talks, President Griffith de- clared ‘‘there will be no lectures of the above mentioned kind perpetrated on thé players of the Washington Club.” This last statement of the Wash- ington Club President was considered in baseball circle# here as a virtual Generally Believed French and American Champions Will Be Opposite in Finals, of the ball players of this country. “Ball players in general are gentle- men and their conduct in general is better than that of the average boye of their age “If the Commissioner felt it has duty to reprimand some one or two players in a mattepgdf this kind, he should have fam pinyers and let every one know Just who they arc. “I know ball players as well as any WIMBLEDON, England, June 80.— Miss McKane, considered Britain's best bet in the Wimbledon tennis championships, went down to defeat to-day before Mlle. Suzanne Lenglen, European cbhampio' The scores were 6—1, 7—5. Mrs, Maltory defeated Mrs. Hollick | defiance of the High Commissioner of | °M@ ®0diaw if ae has in a match on the centre court, 6—1,| baseball and aroused ‘considerable in- yale know the ball Mayes to pete terest in view of the rule in the new governing code of organized baseball whieh prohibits public seriticism by the magnates of the Cortmiséioner's actions, Presicent Griffith's statement, as given out, was substantially as’ fol- lows: “If the paper reports of Judge Landis’ curtain lectures to the Yarkee and Red Sox players are correct, and he is rightly quoted, I consider his remarks that the ball players must not gamble, bootleg or carous: around at night a direct insult to 98 per wnt, Congressmen in Private Blame High Cost of Primary Campaigns For the Padding of Payrolls Money Ke pt in Personal Bank Accounts Till Contests Roll Around---One Accused of Dividing Money With Charwoman. (Special Despatch to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, June 30.—The Evening World's articles on nepotisia and padded payrolls continue to be the topic of cloakroom gossip at the Capitol. The House members were glad to have the spotlight removed from them and turned on the Senate, and the story in yesterday's Evening World on Senate conditions was read with interest at both ends of the Capitol. There are many lame excuses heard¢*————————————— all around as to the reasons which | eq in the explanation in behalf of one mfke the carrying of droves of rela-|member of the House accused of tives on Congressignal payrolls pega fideo Road ar ppecer eles “necessary.” Some of the members | for - rann As sociated with say privately that the necessity for) nou) way Shecee He a9 As ne conducting costly primary campaigns |appropriation fifty-fitty with the compels them so to handle the clerical 6—2. “The valtant “fight made by the plucky little English girl thrilled the thousands gathered in the stadi 1 and helped to make it one of the finest matches on the long list of. classics staged on the historic grounds. The Prince of Wales and the Duke o: York arrived during the match Mile. Lenglen played with all the brilliance that has made her the Queen of the European courts and she had to do it to overcome the courageous British girl, a demure little waitress from a tea shop, regarded’ as one of the strongest contenders in the Wim- bledon championships. The pair had met before on the hard courts of Brussels, where Miss McKane put up a good fight but went down to defeat. There was hope that to-day on the grass courts where she is more at home, the little English girl might show an improvement against the French champion. Miss McKane car- ried the greatest hope of England in years to win its national title. Thousands packed the beautiful new Wimbledon Stadium to see what was expected to be one of the great- est battles of all times. The big crowd vociferously hailed Miss McKane as the national hope and paid to her the tribute of an idol, ‘The winner of the match, it is gen- erally believed, will have as her op- ponent in the finals Mrs, Molla Bfjurstedt Mallory. Cochet, the sensational French, boy star, defeated Dean Mathey of Amer- ica, 6—3, 3—1 4, 6—2. Mise Elizabeth Ryan, the California girl, won another match when she de- foated Mrs, McNuir at 4—6, 6—8 and 6—0. per eeht. pure, both as to honesty ahd confuct, &hd any one who refers to them in general as being other- wise is making a big mistake. “There will be no leettires of\ the above mentioned kind perpetrated on the players of the Washington Ciyb."”" K. M. Landis, Commissioner of Baseball, who is in this city, when, in- terviewed concerning the criticism of Clarke Griffith, replied: “My attention has been called to Mr. Griffith's statement. But I have no comment of any kind to make for the present." on Street, charging the larceny of 75, ptirchase of 100 shares of Willys-Over- land; Estelle T. B. Storm, charging the larceny of $174, paid for the out- right purchase of thirty shares of enter Superior Oil; Mollie W. Gantz, # Rex J the larceny of $524, pald for a $500 when (Continued on Twelfth Page.) these io scenes shot. ® Homeseeking y longs mer Made Easy by se Rudolph Flogel, forty-nine years all of The World’s Ads. old, who conducts the Flogel China ing to |] Pecorating Company at.No. 129 Fifth Rago 4 ‘Avenue, Manhattan, and maintains a hie mum efficiency luxurious home at No, 1549 East 46th bean mum effort by reading and following | street, Brooklyn, was convicted in The World’s “Real Estate” an “Apartment to Let” ads. The Sun- day World Real Estate Section in 1 very valuable guide for of running an automobile while in- 2,053 THE SUNDAY WORLD “REAL ESTATE SECTION 18 READ IN 600,000 HOMES sixty days in tne Workhouse, The World ‘Real Extate" and “To Let” Ads Last Week More than the corre- sponding week last year year. | Sixty Days for Merchant Driving Auto While Drunk; Struck Child Time to Make Example of Intoxicated Driv- ers, Says Court, Sentencing Flogel. the Court of General Sessions to-day toxicated, He was sentenced to serve principal witnesses against Floge! were James C. Wingate jr., and his wife, of No, 460 West 119th Street, and Patrolman James J, O'Connell, who arrested him on Feb. 4 of this The Wingates testified that they were at 119th Street and Manhattan Avenue on that date when they saw an woman who does tho janitor work in ropriation for their offices that a|the member's committee room in ad- toed vortion of tt will find its way| «tion to her regular duties, Bone | at A curious thing about Congress is into their bank ‘accounts to be held/that its members always vociferiously fo reserve until their campaigns roll|indorse the principles of honesty in peery the abstract. A few days ago Repre- sentative Sisson, of Mississippi, de- Needless to says, none Some Seta ee Birr Or, MURATDE, Ges make this explanation publicly. They) jiouse in which he used the following squander large sums of public money | janguage: by utilizing official stationery and “In the appropriation of public Government employees in mailing out |unds I feel that every dollar appro- Hterature, and it Is pointed out that |>rated should be appropriated as a it certainly {s not fair that the tax- payers shall have to furnish them the money for local organization work in addition, It {s suggested in some quarters that but for tne recent decision of the Su- preme Court holding the child labor law unconstitutional, a considerable number of members of Congress would be lable to prosecution for violating (Continued on Fourth a INDICT MRS. HIRSH, CHARGING ASSAULT IN FIRST DEGREE Page.) automobile, driven recklessly, strike and injure a child The operator of the car did not stcp. Wingate chased and caught the car and forced the occupant to return to the corner. Flogel was the driver of the car. Mr. Wingate and his wife testified that at first he refused to take the injured child to Knickerbocker Hos- pital and finally did so reluctantly. The Winwates swore that Flogel was The Grand Jury sitting at Mineola, L. L, returned an indictment for as- sault in the first degree this afternoon vary drunk and were corroborated in Ae inal BRta) HAMEL LEN altos ce this respect by the police officer. scar A. Hireh . Flogel said he had not been drink- Oscar rah, 2 business man re- ing on Feb, 4, but had taken some minors. Apparently there ie|Puted to be wealthy, who was medicine for a cold. A doctor testi- fied that the medicine was 20 per cent. alcohol, Justice Salmon in* im- posing sentence said that, Flogel's con- duct was brutal and that it ts time that an example be made of a drunk-! en automobile driv a precocious crop of children when| wounded in the face with a revolver and boys of ten to fifteen years |}ullet at the home of Rene Davies in can fill acceptably positions private] i-ceport late Saturday night and clerks of Congression: Hirsh is recovering in his home in Freeport. Both he and Mrs, Hirsh deniod she shot him, committees. An illustration of the callousness of some of those concerned wag furnish- ders Arrest of Dier, Partner and Two Managers MENACE DWINDLES AS GHIEFS MEET Executives Display Concilia- tory Attitude as Conference Begins in Chicago. 23 ROADS TO ATTEND. Unions May Stay at Work if Employers Drop Outside Contracts, CHIGAGO, June 30.—Leaders of he railway shopmen, whose strike Call, effective to-morrow, affects 400,- 000 men, refused this afternoon to ap- |’ pear before the United St. Rail- road Labor Board, where they were to meet railway executives in an effort to iren out their differences. CHICAGO, June 40 (Associated Press).—Assurance that both the rail- rouds and thelr employees will abide by the law and the orders of the United States Railroad Labor Board was the basis on which the Federal body pinned its*hopes of throttling the threatened rai! strike to-day. From authoritative sources it was learned to-day that practically all of the railroads which have been con- tracting railroad work to outside firms, a practice declared in violation of the law and the board's orders, Would enter the official investigation by the board to-day ready to an nounce compilance with the board's rulings. While there was no announcement that the twenty-three roads which have farmed out work to outside con- tractors would announce discontinu- ance of the practice as a body, every effort was to/be made by the board to bring the recalcitrant roads in line. Definite assurance that the roads would henceforth obey the board's mandates would place every issue over which the six shop unions threaten a strike to-morrow in the hands of the board. Railway executives looked upon the union strike over the $60,000,000 pay cut due to-morrow and the modifica- tion of rules affecting oyertime pay as a matter strictly between the unions and the board. Already five roads—the Pere Mar- quette, Santa Fe, Southern Pacific, Burlington and = 'Frisco—ha an- nounced cancellation of their con- tracts, and if the others fall in line, the board hopes to find a loophole for a strike settlement. CREASY INDICTED FOR THE MURDER OF MISS LAVOY Accused of Shooting and Killing Teacher in Free- port Rooming House. William Creasy, of Covington, Ky., was indicted on a charge of murder in the first degree to-day The indictment was handed up to Justice Callaghan in Supreme Court in Mineola. Creasy is alleged to have shot and killed Miss Edith lavoy, for, merly his sweetheart, in her sitting room in a Freeport rooming house Creasy declares she committed suicide AMUNDSEN LEAVES ALASKA: FOR POLE Explorer on First Lap Be- fore Taking to Airplane. NOME, Alaska, June 30 (Asvociated Press),—Capt, Raold Amundren, Nor wegian explorer, safled from here late yesterday on the first lap of hiy trip, on which he hopes to cross the North Pole in an airplane, The explorer sailed for Point Har row, where he will take cf on the aerial part of his journey, He plens to land on Spitzbergen or on Columbia, Northern Greenland RILADAD STRKE [REBELS GIVE UP FOUR COURTS, O'CONNOR AMONG PRISONERS: DE VALERA DECLARES WAR Two Explosions Rend the Strong- hold—Republican Leader Assumes Supreme Command — Fighting Spreads in Provinces British Troops Attacked in Dublin Streets; Had Not Participated in Attacks on Rebels—Miniature Bat- tles All Over Dublin. “ae DUBLIN, June 30 (Associated ePhe Pour Courts Build- ing in Dublin, stronghold of the insurgent faction of the Irish Repub- lican Army, was surrendered unconditionally £6 the Free State Forces at 4 o'clock this afternoon, it was officially announced by the Free State authorities Commandant Rory O'Connor and Liam Mellowes and the entire, garrison, including all the principal executive officers, were made prisoner, Lieut. Gen, O'Connell, Assistant Chief of Staff, was liberated The offiical statement reads: “At 4 o'clock this afternoon Ernest O'Malley, on behalf of the Executive at the Four Courts, surrendered the butlding unconditionally to Brig. O'Daly, and the entire ga: made prisoner, including Ror, DE VALERA TAKES SUPREME COMMAND OF REBEL TROOPS Gen. Openly Declares W armor, Liam Mellowes and all the princl~ Against Free State pal officers: of the Executive, Lieut Gen, O'Connell, y s Government. en. ‘onnell, Assistant Chief of DUBLIN, sunetiann craked Staff, was literated and reported back Giessen DaWralaka pili at army headquarters.” The casualties among the trregular troops are reported to bi ‘Thirty of the Free State troops were wounded er President of the “Irish Re- public,’ assumed supreme com- mand of the insurgents to-day, in the Four ( plo vone re eae Fonnenhse: (aes e Four Courts explosion. Non however, was killed. were forced to surrender the The insurgent#* who have been oc Four Courts by Free State as- sault to-day, the announcement was made that De Valera had cupying the Fourt Courts in Dubliit surrendered at 4.10 o'clock this after- openly declared war against Col- |noon, it was officially announced, lin's Government, Says a Press Association statement * em 9 The surender was preceded at TELLEGEN-FARRAR o'clock by their hoisting the white fos REUNION DENIED Theatrical Weekly Reported Estranged Couple Were Reconciled. Denials from all sources that could be reached greeted a report printed to-day in a theatrical weekly that Lou Tellegen has returned to the home of his wife, Geraldine Farrar, at No, 20 West 7ith Street, and that the prima donna has become reconciled with her matinee idol husband. “You can state most positively that there is absolutely no foundation for An explosion which blew up a sec. tion of the building preceded the sur render by a few hours. It is believed @ considerable number of the insur gents were wounded by the explosion although they oceupyin that part of the structure which was blown up were not When the surrender took place the Four Courts There the party priest at the head of the column. had were still in flames. 130 of the Irregulars in They marched out with were 4“ The issued Free State commandant the story,” said Miss Ketrick, Miss] | mer Farrar's secretary, at the Farrar] O'ers to cease fring home, ‘Miss Farrar 1s on a motor] The Four Courts Building, strong: trip.” hold of the Irish Republicdn Army “I have had no information about a reconciliation,” sald Harry N, Stein- feld, Lou Tellegen’s counsel, ‘ff such a thing had happened I suppose I should haye been informed about it."’ under Rory O'Connor was occupied by the forces of the Provisional Free State Government shortly before 9 o'clock this morning. insurgents TIPTSBURGM, June 30.—“Abgo-| O8ner Buildings hela by bodies of lutely false,” Lou Tellegen declared] insurgents are now being attacked ‘ to-day, regarding reports in a New| 4nd firing ts proceeding throughout York theatrical pa that had | the city. * been reconciled with Geraldine Farrar,| It was officially stated this afte “T have not moved my things back} moon that the explosion occurred | to Miss Farrar's house, nor do I con-| the busement in the rear of the Four = template doing #o,"* Tellegen said Courts. It was attributed to a fire, pe pS SE SE noticed earlier, reaching the exple- THE WORLD TRAVEL WUREAD, sives. Considerable damage was done. Arcade, Pul.iser (World) Bullding 63-03] An immense mass of debris was Park Row, NY. City ¢ Reckraa| thrown up by the blast and carried 4000 Check room for bi e and parveis| by the wind eastward down the Liffey. day and right. H travellers’ ohevks for sale.—Advt, (Continued on Twelfth Page. ;